473 research outputs found
transition in lattice QCD
We study the electromagnetic
transition in 2+1 flavor lattice QCD, which gives access to the dominant decay
mode of baryon. The magnetic dipole and the electric quadrupole
transition form factors are computed. The magnetic dipole form factor is found
to be mainly determined by the strange quark and the electric quadrupole form
factor to be negligibly small, in consistency with the quark model. We also
evaluate the helicity amplitudes and the decay rate.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure. Added references and discussio
A look inside charmed-strange baryons from lattice QCD
The electromagnetic form factors of the spin-3/2 baryons, namely
, , and , are
calculated in full QCD on PACS-CS lattices with a pion mass of
156(9) MeV. The electric charge radii and magnetic moments from the and
multipole form factors are extracted. Results for the electric quadrupole
form factors, , are also given. Quark sector contributions are computed
individually for each observable and then combined to obtain the baryon
properties. We find that the charm quark contributions are systematically
smaller than the strange-quark contributions in the case of the charge radii
and magnetic moments. moments of the and
provide a statistically significant data to conclude that their electric charge
distributions are deformed to an oblate shape. Properties of the spin-1/2
and baryons are also computed and a thorough
comparison is given. This complete study gives valuable hints about the
heavy-quark dynamics in charmed hadrons.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures. Includes a subsection on the systematic effect
Electromagnetic structure of charmed baryons in Lattice QCD
As a continuation of our recent work on the electromagnetic properties of the
doubly charmed baryon, we compute the charge radii and the magnetic
moments of the singly charmed , and the doubly charmed
baryons in 2+1 flavor Lattice QCD. In general, the charmed
baryons are found to be compact as compared to the proton. The charm quark acts
to decrease the size of the baryons to smaller values. We discuss the mechanism
behind the dependence of the charge radii on the light valence- and sea-quark
masses. The magnetic moments are found to be almost stable with respect to
changing quark mass. We investigate the individual quark sector contributions
to the charge radii and the magnetic moments. The magnetic moments of the
singly charmed baryons are found to be dominantly determined by the light quark
and the role of the charm quark is significantly enhanced for the doubly
charmed baryons.Comment: Updated results, improved analysis. Version to appear in JHE
Electromagnetic properties of doubly charmed baryons in Lattice QCD
We compute the electromagnetic properties of \Xi_cc baryons in 2+1 flavor
Lattice QCD. By measuring the electric charge and magnetic form factors of
\Xi_cc baryons, we extract the magnetic moments, charge and magnetic radii as
well as the \Xi_cc \Xi_cc \rho coupling constant, which provide important
information to understand the size, shape and couplings of the doubly charmed
baryons. We find that the two heavy charm quarks drive the charge radii and the
magnetic moment of \Xi_cc to smaller values as compared to those of, e.g., the
proton.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures; added discussions and references, version
accepted by PL
Vector and axial-vector couplings of D and D* mesons in 2+1 flavor Lattice QCD
Using the axial-vector coupling and the electromagnetic form factors of the D
and D* mesons in 2+1 flavor Lattice QCD, we compute the D*D\pi, DD\rho and
D*D*\rho coupling constants, which play an important role in describing the
charm hadron interactions in terms of meson-exchange models. We also extract
the charge radii of D and D* mesons and determine the contributions of the
light and charm quarks separately.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures; added references and comments, published versio
Numerical observation of non-axisymmetric vesicles in fluid membranes
By means of Surface Evolver (Exp. Math,1,141 1992), a software package of
brute-force energy minimization over a triangulated surface developed by the
geometry center of University of Minnesota, we have numerically searched the
non-axisymmetric shapes under the Helfrich spontaneous curvature (SC) energy
model. We show for the first time there are abundant mechanically stable
non-axisymmetric vesicles in SC model, including regular ones with intrinsic
geometric symmetry and complex irregular ones. We report in this paper several
interesting shapes including a corniculate shape with six corns, a
quadri-concave shape, a shape resembling sickle cells, and a shape resembling
acanthocytes. As far as we know, these shapes have not been theoretically
obtained by any curvature model before. In addition, the role of the
spontaneous curvature in the formation of irregular crenated vesicles has been
studied. The results shows a positive spontaneous curvature may be a necessary
condition to keep an irregular crenated shape being mechanically stable.Comment: RevTex, 14 pages. A hard copy of 8 figures is available on reques
Non-spherical shapes of capsules within a fourth-order curvature model
We minimize a discrete version of the fourth-order curvature based Landau
free energy by extending Brakke's Surface Evolver. This model predicts
spherical as well as non-spherical shapes with dimples, bumps and ridges to be
the energy minimizers. Our results suggest that the buckling and faceting
transitions, usually associated with crystalline matter, can also be an
intrinsic property of non-crystalline membranes.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures (LaTeX macros EPJ), accepted for publication in
EPJ
Radiative transitions of doubly charmed baryons in lattice QCD
We evaluate the spin-3/2→spin-1/2 electromagnetic transitions of the doubly charmed baryons on 2+1 flavor, 323×64 PACS-CS lattices with a pion mass of 156(9) MeV/c2. A relativistic heavy quark action is employed to minimize the associated systematic errors on charm-quark observables. We extract the magnetic dipole, M1, and the electric quadrupole, E2, transition form factors. In order to make a reliable estimate of the M1 form factor, we carry out an analysis by including the effect of excited-state contributions. We find that the M1 transition is dominant and light degrees of freedom (u/d- or s-quark) play the leading role. E2 form factors, on the other hand, are found to be negligibly small, which in turn, have a minimal effect on the helicity and transition amplitudes. We predict the decay widths and lifetimes of Ξcc∗+,++ and Ωcc∗+ based on our results. Finite size effects on these ensembles are expected to be around 1%. Differences in kinematical and dynamical factors with respect to the Nγ→Δ transition are discussed and compared to nonlattice determinations while keeping possible systematic artifacts in mind. A comparison to Ωcγ→Ωc∗ transition and a discussion on systematic errors related to the choice of heavy quark action are also given. Results we present here are particularly suggestive for experimental facilities such as LHCb, PANDA, Belle II, and BESIII to search for further states.TÜBİTAK ; KAKENHIPublisher versio
Inoculation response of mycorrhizas on morphology and physiological behaviour of trifoliate orange (Poncirus trifoliata) roots under salt stress
Citrus is highly sensitive to salt stress, and little efforts have been successful microbiologically to mitigate such abiotic stress. In this background, trifoliate orange [Poncirus trifoliata (L.) Raf.] seedlings were inoculated with Diversispora versiformis and exposed to 100 mM NaCl treatment for 85 days under controlled conditions. The NaCl application, though, strongly inhibited root mycorrhizal colonization in seedlings, but mycorrhizal inoculation considerably increased the root projected area and number of second- and third-order lateral roots under 100 mM NaCl treatment. Mycorrhizal-inoculated seedlings showed significantly higher soluble protein concentration, ornithine decarboxylase, arginine decarboxylase, and superoxide dismutase activity in leaves and roots, irrespective of NaCl concentration. While mycorrhizal seedlings displayed significantly lower polyamine oxidase activity and diamine oxidase activity in leaves and roots, irrespective of NaCl concentration. These results, thus, suggested that mycorrhizal plants were physiologically activated through mycorrhizal inoculation to downplay the adverse effect of salt stress
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